
THE BIRTH AND EMERGENCE OF THE LIBERAL FORUM, 1985–1987 (1987) The Liberal Forum was established in 1985 by a group of ‘small-l’ liberals to try to offset the conservative tide that was building. That the forum was unsuccessful in halting the conservative tide is a matter of history. The following account sets out some of what we did and how we proceeded. Reflecting on the progress of the Liberal Forum in May 1987, it seems incredible that we have achieved so much in so short a time. So much! It was just over two years ago, in February 1985, that we met first and established our small, self-selected group at a time of great crisis for philosophical liberals. Max Burr claims that he was a prime mover in the formation of the group. He acted after a conversation with Yvonne Thompson, who, after years of involvement in Liberal Party councils, was thinking of throwing it all in, and getting out of organisational politics. Alan Missen was alive then, and Peter Rae was still a senator—not yet translated to his ministerial role in Tasmanian state politics and to a closer relationship with Robin Gray, the conservative ‘Liberal’ premier of that state. Things were grim then and becoming grimmer. The ‘economic rationalists’, ‘conservative radicals’, ‘dries’, call them what you will, were well advanced in redefining non-Labor politics in laissez-faire economic terms—and in purely economic terms. Our leaders no longer talked publicly at all, nor privately for that matter, of the liberties and primacy of individuals, and there was certainly less talk of the obligations of each of us towards all others, especially those 165 A Dissident LIBERAL in need. There was little talk of empowering the weak or helpless, little or no rhetoric about the role of liberalism in securing and extending our liberties, or of developing new opportunities for the less privileged in society. On the contrary, there was a concerted campaign from within my own party, and my own side of politics, to attack and belittle the recipients of welfare as being cheats, or layabouts, anxious to prosper on the welfare handed out by their industrious brethren. The fact that few people live in luxury on welfare alone never features in their thinking or their public rhetoric. Of course those who use welfare to cheat the system are another matter. Moves to extend power to women and to racial minorities were bitterly opposed in our party and party room, the racist regime in South Africa had committed minority party room support, and opposition to communist expansion was regarded as almost adequate defence of rotten dictatorships. Not only was it a wrong analysis, but it was a laissez-faire libertarian credo based too much on greed and self-interest. Our political leaders were disposed to turn a blind eye to racist calls in the area of immigration, and to make calls for cuts in personal tax the cornerstone of policy. Tax cuts are admirable, provided one can identify clearly what are the consequential costs to others. The costs to others have not yet been clearly set out. In May 1987, at the time this is written, greed and self-interest drive the tax- reduction campaign. Nothing is heard about the needy, and there has been no analysis of the social costs of proposed cuts in personal income tax. For me, the question of social costs is a prior question, to be answered in detail before cuts in revenue as a consequence of lower taxes are even contemplated. In 1985 this dismal scenario was already well advanced, and the forces of greed and self-interest were about to organise themselves into several groupings which together became known as the ‘New Right’. Not only this, but our then leader Andrew Peacock was more a prisoner of the tide of events than its helmsman. He subscribed cheerfully to the goal of a cut in the level of personal income tax, and campaigned on it. He proposed, as did his successor, John Howard, to cut the expenditures of government to fund the tax cuts. But, simultaneously, he opposed the initiatives of the Labor Government to gain alternative revenue by taxing certain lump sum taxation payments, to tax certain capital gains on investments, and to add a means test to the income test that was applied to pensions. Not only this, but there were other proposals for substantial new government expenditures in child care, family allowances, and a tendency to offer new bribes to middle Australia as part of the election manifesto of the Liberal Party. 166 the birth and eMergenCe of the LiberaL foruM, 1985–1987 (1987) The Labor Party had a field day pointing up the internal contradictions in our policy statement. No wonder Yvonne Thompson felt like getting out. This was not the party for which she had worked for 20 years. This was no longer a party seeking sacrifice from the rich to assist those in need; rather it seemed (and seems still) to be the reverse. The invitation to me to join the Liberal Forum, then nameless, came from my old close friend Chris Puplick. I accepted it immediately, insisting only that it should be an ‘ideas’ group, not a leadership destabilisation group. Named the ‘Liberal Forum’, the group met quietly, clandestinely in fact, for the first year or so. Partly because of this, Tom Harley nicknamed it ‘the Black Hand’. The name stuck. I had joined a significant group of compatible people, people to whom I had always felt close, and to whom I was to become closer month by month. Senator Robert Hill was, and in May 1987 remains, President of the South Australian Division of the Liberal Party. Something of an expert in the area of foreign policy, he, like Chris Puplick, is a talented numbers man. He has a cool head, a liberal vision, and plenty of courage. Robert is a lawyer with an LLM degree, son of the Honourable Murray Hill MLC of South Australia, and fortunate to come from the most liberal state in Australia. His interests and parliamentary expertise lie in foreign affairs. His wife, Diana, is deputy principal of a private school in Adelaide and a liberated feminist. She and Robert have a large, rambling house with large, lolloping dogs and children, including an adopted girl from Vietnam. Robert has the problem of dealing with Bruce MacDonald, who still hopes to do to the Liberal Party in South Australia what he has already done to it in New South Wales. Senator Christopher Puplick is probably the most formidable mind on our side of politics. He has a Sydney MA in history, and cut his political teeth working on the staff of the brilliant W.C. (Bill) Wentworth when Bill was a minister. Chris was NSW state, and later federal, president of the Young Liberal Movement of Australia. He worked on my staff in the mid 1970s until he entered the Senate as its second-youngest senator ever. Out in a bad election year, he came back a few years later, beating the awful Bronwyn Bishop decisively in a preselection. Michael Baume was selected between Chris and Bronwyn in that particular preselection. Chris is feared in the party room by stupid or ill-prepared shadow ministers. Not only does he generally know more than they do about most subjects, he is also more articulate, more persuasive, more influential, and more credible. He is not popular with those in power. I was warned on many occasions that my close friendship with Puplick was attracting adverse political comment. I was even warned that I should distance myself from him to ensure that my preselection was not put at risk. Since Chris is my friend, and has shared my apartment, and since he and I are allies in most battles, I have not acted on the advice that has flowed in. I have ignored that advice quite deliberately, 167 A Dissident LIBERAL and more and more openly as the Liberal Forum developed. My preselection was secured, first with a decisive win over Bronwyn Bishop for first place on a half-Senate ticket, and then for my place in the double-dissolution election of July 1987. There have even been allegations that Chris is gay. If true, this is irrelevant to questions about his capacity, and worse, if false, it is simply part of the viciousness and mutual unhappiness that characterises our current situation. Max Burr is the least intellectual of the Liberal Forum members, but he is also one of the tough and smart survivors. He has held a difficult constituency for a long time, and has resisted both his Labor and his Liberal opponents. He is a good counter of numbers. His constituency is Lyons, which covers most of Tasmania except for the urban areas of Hobart and Launceston and the north-west of the state. Max has coped with very conservative and hostile electorate presidents and party officials. A former shearer, he gained his advanced education as an adult. He is a person with good instincts and dislikes the ideas of the ‘dries’ with an admirable intensity. Ian Macphee is the best known of the philosophical liberals. He is also the most overtly ambitious. He has offered himself to the party room as deputy leader without success and will probably continue to offer himself in future party leadership elections. Originally from Sydney, Ian lived in the Mosman area and attended North Sydney Technical High School. He was a godson of Eileen Furley, who was a Liberal member of the old non-elected Legislative Council of New South Wales.
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